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Cornish fishing company fined £8,170 for moving vessel

by Maritime and Coastguard Agency on 16 Mar 2017
Cornish fishing company fined £8,170 for moving vessel Maritime and Coastguard Agency Press https://mcanet.mcga.gov.uk/press/albums.php
Yesterday, Wednesday 15 March, Rowse Fishing Ltd of Newlyn Cornwall was fined a total of £8,170 after being prosecuted by the Maritime and Coastguard Agency (MCA) for moving a new build fishing vessel without the appropriate load-line certificate. Mark Rowse, Director of Rowse Fishing Ltd, who pleaded guilty on behalf of the company, was fined £3,000 by Truro Magistrates Court and ordered to pay a victim surcharge of £170 and £5,000 towards the cost of the prosecution.

Mr Rowse’s company intended the new build to become a registered 15m fishing vessel. Mr Rowse requested the MCA undertake a load-line exemption survey of the vessel prior to it being moved, but went on to arrange the tow of the vessel before it had been surveyed, and an exemption certificate had been granted.

The MCA then discovered that that the vessel had been shortened during its build, at the request of Mr Rowse, without new stability calculations being undertaken. The Seafish surveyor who visited the vessel on 8 September 2016 had not authorised this change and had stated the vessel was not to be moved until revised stability calculations had been undertaken and defects within the build rectified. Mr Rowse then proceeded to move the vessel from Polruan to Newlyn on 17 September 2016, without the appropriate load-line certificate and load-line markings on the hull.

Tony Heslop, Survey Area Operations Manager based at the MCA's Plymouth Marine Office said: 'This new vessel had been towed on a sea voyage without the appropriate load-line survey being undertaken. The fundamental aim of such a survey is to ensure the vessel is safe enough to go to sea. This was not done in this case, which was aggravated by the fact the structure of the vessel was not in accordance with the original plans. This was a somewhat reckless decision by Mr Rowse that could have had some very serious consequences. The Merchant Shipping Act is there for a reason and cannot be circumvented by those who regard it as an inconvenience.'
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